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| [Nettime-nl] free video program in SMART Cinema, A Close Watch (Undermining the Overview: Part 1) | 
| SMART Project Space | 1st Constantijn Huygensstraat 20, Amsterdam +31 (0)20 427 5951  A Close Watch (Undermining the Overview: 
Part 1)  Every Sunday and Wednesday at 17.00 SMART 
Project Space presents free video programs in Smart Cinema.  This video program accompanies the 
exhibition, Someone To Watch Over Me |  January 12 – February 16, 
2003  Sunday, January 12 and Wednesday, January 
15,  17.00 hrs.   Saiki Hiromi │ You Can’t Always Blame the 
Sky (2000, Japan, 18 min.) Submitted 
for close study is “example #792813” who is obsessed with how she appears to 
others.  Her own self scrutiny 
becomes our entry into our own studied overview.  Mark Rappaport │ From the Journals of Jean 
Seberg  (1997, USA, 100 
min.) The 
intimate view of a small town girl turned iconic creature turned multiple 
surveillance subject.  Beyond the 
chilling inexorability of the biographical details, Rappaport explores the 
ideological attitudes that commercial films subliminally offer above and beyond 
the story, the stars and the price of admission:  the message and value assumptions that 
linger on long after the plot is forgotten.  A tape about film theory:  semiology in 
practice.    Sunday, January 19 and Wednesday, January 
22,  17.00 
hrs.  Rashid Mashawari │ Tension (1998, 
Palestine, 26 min.) A study in 
the malaise of living under the panoptic watchful eye of security and control 
which is in turn exposed to close and detached scrutiny. Michael Klier │ Der Riese (1983, Germany, 82 min.) Klier’s  
by now immortal compendium of urban surveillance material from traffic 
control to department store security practice reaches symphonically paranoid 
heights and finally resolves in an image of cathartic and breathless 
paradox.  Kurt Sayenga │ Spies Above (1996, USA, 
55 min.) Taking a 
little more distance than Der Riese, this work collects the products of 
industrious spy satellites in space and presents a confidential history of the 
secret CIA agency which initiated and maintains their use since its inception 
during the Eisenhower fifties.    Sunday, January 26 and Wednesday, January 
29,  17.00 
hrs.  Jane Campion │ Passionless Moments 
(1993, Australia, 13 min.) An incisive 
panoptic scrutiny of a few particular specimens at a few particular moments that 
prove particularly pertinent.  Manthia Diawara │ Rouch In Reverse 
(1995, Mali/U.K., 51 min.) A 
conceptual coup of sorts: an effort at what its maker calls “reverse 
anthropology”; the first work to look at European anthropology from the 
perspective of its subjects.  
Diawara’s provocative tape examines the anthropological enterprise 
through the work of reknowned ethnographic film-maker Jean Rouch.    Gene Searchinger │ Paradox on 72nd 
Street  (1980, USA, 55 
min.) The 
intersection of West 72nd street and Broadway in New York City becomes, under 
close scrutiny, a microcosm of human interaction. This active and attuned 
surveillance delineates the struggle between individualism  and collectivity. Systems and 
institutions  which provide order 
and control are analysed as well as the unconscious  gestures and modes of etiquette which 
human beings impose on themselves. This work was suggested by ideas in Philip 
Slater’s book The Pursuit of Loneliness and was made with the 
collaboration of sociologist Slater and biologist Lewis 
Thomas.    Sunday, February 2 and Wednesday, February 
5,  17.00 
hrs.  Mori Fumitake │ A Tick By the White 
Tower (2000, Japan, 30 min.) Having 
grown up under the panoptical gaze of the impassive central tower of his high 
school campus, our inveterately self-conscious hero is determined to become a 
tick that might risk stopping time.  Alan and Susan Raymond │ American Family 
Revisited (1990, USA, 58 min.) Another 
anthropological/media turnabout in the form of an epilogue which provides a ten 
years after update on the Loud family: the subjects of the Raymond’s pioneering 
documentary program An American Family of the seventies and the true dawn 
of  “reality TV”.  Here is a case where the subjects have 
been completely altered by the process of scrutiny and tele-visual 
surveillance.  Sachiko Hamada and Scott Sinkler │ Inside 
Life Outside (1988, USA, 57 min.) Following a 
closely knit group of homeless people living in a lower east side shantytown 
over a two and a half year period. This work proposes an alternate anthropology 
of the self where all categories are mediated and found contradictory. Unlike 
the typical television family, these people thrive on the self awareness that 
the watchful eyes inspire.    Sunday, February 9 and Wednesday, February 
12,  17.00 
hrs.  Jane Campion │ A Girl’s Own Story (1991, 
Australia, 27 min.) The dawning 
of rigorous self-scrutiny and its reflexive desire: a clarion call for “someone 
to watch over me”…  Danielle Smith │ Song of Umm 
Dalaila  (1993, Algeria, 35 
min.) Smith shot 
this work in a Sahrawi refugee camp in Algeria concentrating on the women which 
made up 80% of the adult population of the camp. What interests us here is how 
these women come to assume primary responsibility for the survival of the 
refugees and offer a different paradigm of the watchful eye of 
scrutiny.  Nina Rosenblum│ Through the Wire (1990, 
USA, 77 min.) The brutal 
flipside of the implications of Umm Dalaila:  Locked in a basement, deprived of sleep, 
psychologically tormented, strip searched daily by male guards, video taped in 
the bathroom—three women are political prisoners in the USA—where they say this 
can’t happen.  In a high security 
dungeon in Lexington, Kentucky is the United States government conducting secret 
experiments in brainwashing and behavioural modification on these women? Is this 
what we can expect from the brave new world of panoptic 
security?    Sunday, February 16 and Wednesday, February 
19,  17.00 
hrs.  Sven Augustijnen │ Something on Bach 
(1998, Belgium, 37 min.) The rear 
window surveillance approach is taken to a rehearsal of Alain Platel’s Les 
Ballets C. de la B. seen through the windows of the rehearsal space from a 
vantage point across the street which produces a multivalent reading of a 
complex set of events.  Ross McElwee │ The Six O’Clock News  (1997, USA, 102 
min.) We now 
seize that ultimate daily moment of scrutiny and world surveillance:  the six o’clock news and what’s more we 
choose to engage it directly and call its bluff.  McElwee decides to enter into the events 
of the news when they come close to home after a hurricane has leveled the town 
where he has previously filmed and where his friend Charleen Swansea, a frequent 
McElwee subject, lives.  Thus a new 
journey for the ever watchful eye begins.  
This work also constitutes a sequel of sorts to Time Indefinite 
included in last month’s program “Like Real”. 
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